However, one of the major requirements for such large- scale disinvestments is a government thinking on those lines, as lack of political will and union pressure have been halting such proposals for a long time including during the tenure of the previous UPA government, he said.

Parekh, chairman of financial services giant HDFC, spoke to PTI in an extensive interview, wherein he also talked about steps that are required to improve ease of doing business in the country and to convert prevailing optimism into investments on the ground.

Giving examples from during the UPA regime, Parekh said he has been part of many important government panels, including those on BSNL and Indian Railways, but nothing moved on the suggestions made by those committees.

"...if you run down a company to that level in the public sector that no private sector entity will want to take it, then what will you do?" he wondered.

Parekh also hoped the first full Budget of the Narendra Modi government will focus on reforms without much populism and pitched for incentives for the companies to launch new projects and give a boost to the 'Make in India' campaign.

He said the government's finances are in a much better position to go ahead with reforms, following steps like reduction in subsidy and checking of wastages and leakages, but it would have to remain within its means.

While echoing Finance Minister Arun Jaitley's assertion that reforms can happen through 365 days a year, rather than being only on the Budget day, Parekh said the BJP's defeat in Delhi elections was unlikely to result into any kind of populist measures at the cost of reforms.

He also flagged a continuing fear among bureaucrats of being hauled up as a major reason for inordinate delays in the decision-making process, saying things can change for better if they are assured of protection.

Parekh, a leading industry voice who has always been vocal on issues faced by the companies and investors from India and abroad, said the Prime Minister has, time and again, assured the bureaucrats that they should not worry and "act without fear or favour".

"This is the right thing to do (assuring the bureaucrats), but seeing what has happened to some of their ex-colleagues, bureaucrats are still not 100 per cent sure that if they take a call and it goes wrong, will they be investigated or will they be treated like they made money or it was vested interest and all that," he said.

Parekh said a lot of decisions have been taken by the Modi government, "but it is the process... Fast-tracking these processes will ensure improvement on the ease of doing business front".

He rejected the perception that the Prime Minister was controlling everything and this was reason that was delaying the processes.